Family members of a teenager burned alive on Saturday night are desperate for answers in the heinous Mississippi murder.
Jessica Chambers, 19, was found burning near her car that was also engulfed in flames. She was flown to a hospital in Memphis but later died. Early autopsy results reveal that Jessica died from severe burns that covered 98 percent of her body.
Her father, Ben Chambers, said investigators told him his daughter was set on fire.
“When the fire department got there, she was walking down the road on fire,” he said. “Only part of her body that wasn’t burned was the bottom of her feet.”
He continued as he held back tears, “They squirted lighter fluid down her throat and in her nose, and apparently they knocked her out. She had a big gash on top of her head.”
In her last breaths, she may have sent investigators down her killer’s trail.

Ali Alsanai is in just about every story regarding the CCTV system. Another HERE. And this guy has every reason in the world to distance himself from this story.
Ali Alsanai, aka Basem Alsanai, is the key player in the local “Black Squad” gang community. BIG TIME. Ali Alsanai is also a muslim radical who posts pictures of dead jews gleefully upon his social media and advocates for extremist Islamic positions.

But wait, it gets worse

The scent of fresh cut grass is plants screaming.
Abolish Lawns and golf courses! Suppression of grasses is an inter-kingdom hate crime.
TAX TURF NOT EARTH

Took me forever to read everything. This is horrific beyond words. That poor girl, what she went through before dying. I hope they get the person or people who did this to her.

this is just the tip of the iceberg I was reading on TCT twitter and FB of all the people involved for a good part of the morning and again later today and still have lots of questions.

The really terrible thing is that I think its plausible that she may have been killed by a someone for dating the black guys. there is speculation from people there that it might have even been her dad. Or the LEO is trying to pin it on the gangs to cover a rape. There is some really bizarre characters in this town the rescue guy that was a first responder really creeps me out?

every local I have listened to seems to be either lying or holding back information.

THE IMPLICATIONS OF A PLANTED JIHADEST IS FRIGHTENING and the guy running the store really does seem suspicious but not necessarily involved directly but his views on women and such are implicating him in other things.

It is really a screwed up situation the sherrif and the cheif of police have restraining orders on each other and a case were a black man was run over on purpose by a teen implies some serious racist shit.

IDK which side is trying to put the blame on the other or if its true that drug money has been buying off the LEO

The scent of fresh cut grass is plants screaming.
Abolish Lawns and golf courses! Suppression of grasses is an inter-kingdom hate crime.
TAX TURF NOT EARTH

Man getting death threats due to Jessica Chambers investigation
PANOLA COUNTY, Miss. — The gas station worker who spoke to Jessica Chambers the night she died told WREG he is receiving death threats.
The employee, Ali Alsanai, went to the Panola County Sheriff’s office Monday to try to get an order of protection.
Online, people have accused Alsanai of editing the store surveillance video. Alsanai told WREG the time stamp on the video is off due to Daylight Saving Time.
Alsanai has also been accused of gang ties due to posts he has made on social media showing large sums of cash.
“They came to the store, they asked for the surveillance video. I showed them the surveillance video. The next day, they came and asked for the camera, so I gave them the camera system. What else can I do?” he said.
There is no indication as of now that Alsanai is involved in the death of Jessica Chambers.
Monday, the Panola County Sheriff’s Office confirmed the FBI is now involved in the investigation of the death of Jessica Chambers.

The scent of fresh cut grass is plants screaming.
Abolish Lawns and golf courses! Suppression of grasses is an inter-kingdom hate crime.
TAX TURF NOT EARTH

The FBI is offering a reward of up to $25,000 for information leading to the identification, arrest, and conviction of the person or persons responsible for the death of Jessica Chambers. A poster announcing the reward and asking for the public's assistance is being posted on the FBI's website at http://www.fbi.gov/wanted/seeking-in...-chambers/view.

On December 6, 2014, 19-year-old Jessica Lane Chambers was attacked and burned by an unknown assailant or assailants. Jessica died as a result of the injuries she suffered during that attack.

Since the discovery of this brutal crime, multiple state, local, and federal law enforcement agencies have participated in a collaborative investigative effort to identify the person or persons responsible for Jessica's death. Significant resources have been dedicated to this investigation, and additional rewards have been offered for information relevant to this case.

“We continue to solicit the public's assistance in solving this heinous crime,” stated FBI Special Agent in Charge, Donald Alway. “With the public's help, we are confident that information will be uncovered which will lead to the arrest and successful prosecution of the individual or individuals who cruelly and brutally attacked and killed Jessica Chambers.”

Anyone with information concerning the murder of Jessica Chambers is encouraged to call the FBI at 601-948-5000, the Panola County Sheriff's Department at 662-563-6230, or CrimeStoppers at1-800-729-2169.

The scent of fresh cut grass is plants screaming.
Abolish Lawns and golf courses! Suppression of grasses is an inter-kingdom hate crime.
TAX TURF NOT EARTH

Lisa Daugherty knew she had to be brave for her daughter, Jessica Chambers, as the teenager lay in a hospital bed in Memphis after being found severely burned on a rural road in Courtland.Daugherty summoned up the courage to walk into Jessica's room, having been told her daughter was burned beyond recognition. But Daugherty knew her little girl when she saw her, and she knew she had to give her permission to let go.
"You could see the monitor and her heart was still beating, and they had her on intubation and stuff. I put my arm up on her shoulder and leaned over, and felt of her neck, it wasn't burned. I said, 'Jessica, it's OK, Baby, Mama's here, and Daddy's in the waiting room. You know your daddy — he's a big, old baby and he can't come in here, but he's here. And we love you,' " she said.
"And I just looked at her and said, 'I know you're in pain, Baby, if you want to go, you can go.' And she took her last breath."

"I know there's a time that I'm going to break. I've come to the point of crying at night. I feel like the time's going to be closer to when they find out who," she said. "I don't want them to just pick up someone and say, 'Oh, we have evidence that this is going to be it.' No. I want the right one. I don't want a fall guy. I want THE guy. Girl. Whatever."

Six months ago, a teenager was burned alive in a tiny Mississippi town. Police say they still don’t know who killed her or why, leaving the mystery in the hands of amateur online sleuthsJessica was murdered last December, but people from all over the country still convene on forums and in Facebook groups to argue about who killed her and why. Private investigators seeking the now $54,000 reward for information leading to Jessica’s killer have trawled the county for clues, but the dozens of diehards who post every few hours about Jessica’s case have never even been to the scene of the crime: Courtland, Mississippi, population 512.
These people — who range from C-list conservative bloggers to gluten-free bakers from Montreal, boat enthusiasts from Florida, and grocery-coupon collectors from North Carolina — claim to want #JusticeForJessica above all. Instead, they’ve terrorized her formerly sleepy hometown with their relentless demands for answers to their specious theories. In the process, they’ve spread rumors that have filtered into real life, igniting racial tensions, digging up old skeletons, and reawakening feuds. For these amateur detectives, Jessica’s death isn’t a mother’s tragedy. It’s a pastime.

Some are generous. More than 152,000 people “like” the “Justice for Jessica” Facebook page run by Jessica’s older half sister, a space for people to share photos and donate books to libraries in her name and pray for her family. They’ve sent Jessica’s family cards and quilts and spa treatment gift certificates and flowers picked from their own gardens. After the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation took Lisa’s laptop for evidence — she says they still haven’t returned it — someone sent her a new one. In May, when Lisa’s phone stopped working, someone quickly mailed her a replacement.

But in return, they demand answers. They want to run their psychic premonitions by Lisa and dissect her parenting skills. When Lisa gets frustrated, they accuse her of being evasive or sending them on a “wild-goose chase.” Sometimes Lisa tries to reason with them. Other times, she fights back. (Recently, after a woman called her “rude,” Lisa wrote back, “You Might understand My BABY was Murdered!! Yes I get angry if you can’t deal with that a little bit i am sorry!!”) Sometimes she tells them what she thinks they want to hear, even if it’s a lie, in hopes that they’ll finally leave her in peace. But Lisa is the first to admit that she doesn’t really want them to go away.

Authorities say they’re working on Jessica’s case full time and are finally making progress, but it’s been months since Lisa has heard any updates, she said, and most of Jessica’s friends don’t stop by that often anymore.

“I don’t want to close the computer, because I don’t want to close my eyes,” Lisa said. “If I close them, I see her burning.”

Barnes is one of the Facebook sleuths most committed to Jessica’s case. He is also one of the most contentious. One user wrote in May that Barnes had accused “everyone from ISIS to anyone in the state of Mississippi who happened to be African American” of being involved in Jessica’s murder. Barnes told me that he didn’t like it when people claimed Ali Fadhel and Bryan Rudd were “normal kids” instead of “the gang members that they are.” One of Jessica’s family friends, Heather Parker, said she wanted to file a restraining order against Barnes because he wouldn’t stop falsely accusing her of profiting off a few hundred “Justice for Jessica” T-shirts. (Barnes said he still thinks she did.)

Mohamed Fadhel, the 54-year-old owner of M&M 1st Stop convenience store, moved to Courtland from Buffalo, New York, two years ago. He’s never been on Jessica Chambers Mystery or any other Facebook group or forum, he said. But he almost had to close his business after it was reported that it was the last place Jessica was seen alive. He and his teenage son Ali, who sold Jessica gas that night, cooperated with police by turning over CCTV video and answering questions (Ali said Jessica bought $14 worth of gas that night instead of her usual $3 or $4). But because 19-year-old Ali bragged about buying watches and shooting guns on Facebook, where he also posted photos of himself flashing what commenters thought were gang signs in the shop with black men, the internet deduced he had somehow lured Jessica to her death. At the very least, commenters wrote, he must know something. (At the very worst, the teenager, whose father moved to the U.S. from Yemen over 20 years ago, had been instated there by ISIS.)
Ali moved to another county in Mississippi shortly after because of death threats, he said, and his father was barely able to pay his employees or make rent. “Everyone was scared to come here,” he said. “My son is just a kid. Jessica was just a girl. We had nothing to do with this.”http://www.buzzfeed.com/katiejmbaker...-f#.hykgJVzbgL

The scent of fresh cut grass is plants screaming.
Abolish Lawns and golf courses! Suppression of grasses is an inter-kingdom hate crime.
TAX TURF NOT EARTH

The last news was
Ben Chambers said a conversation he had with Panola County Investigator Barry Thompson has given him new hope.
"I talked to the lead detective last Thursday, and he told me -- he's never lied to me before -- he said, 'I'm promise you I'm going to get them, Ben,'" Chambers said.
At this point, Chambers said, he's got a good feeling about the case, and after eight grueling months, he's ready to see justice done.
"I believe it’s going to be who we thought it was from the front. I really believe it," Chambers said, adding that he thinks it's going to come down to a situation where Jessica "beat" someone over $500.
When asked to elaborate on the situation, Chambers simply said, "I believe it's all going to boil down to that."

A Mississippi man already suspected in a murder reportedly has been indicted in the December 2014 burning death of a 19-year-old woman.

Quinton Tellis, 27, was indicted on capital murder charges Tuesday by a special grand jury in the death of Jessica Chambers, The Clarion-Ledger reported.

Tellis is currently being held in the Ouachita Parish Jail in Monroe, La. on charges connected to the August 2015 death of a University of Louisiana Monroe exchange student, the newspaper reported.

Authorities in Panola County, Miss. have scheduled a press conference about the case for 10:30 a.m. Wednesday.

Chambers was found on a back road shortly after 8 p.m. on Dec. 6, 2014, with burns covering more than 98 percent of her body.

When emergency responders arrived at the scene, Chambers was walking away from her burning vehicle and able to utter a few words to them about the attack -- though authorities have not said what, if anything, the young woman was able to communicate. She later died from her injuries at a hospital in Memphis.

Tellis is believed to have been the last person to have been with Chambers the night she was killed. The two allegedly had a relationship in the weeks leading up to her death, officials told The Clarion-Ledger.
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"...of no more satisfying conceit than the discovery of such hidden depths of character in one's own child..." - From Survive the Savage SeaIntegrity is doing the right thing when no one is looking.

The prosecution's case in Mississippi will hinge largely on cellphone data that place Tellis and Jessica Chambers together much of the day she died. Tellis previously told investigators that he had been with Jessica Chambers for part of the night she died, authorities said.

Judge Gerald Chatham declared a mistrial Monday, October 16, in the case.
The jury handed a bailiff a note saying They had reached a verdict.
Before the decision was read, Judge Gerald Chatham asked if they had unanimously agreed on a verdict. A male juror spoke the shocking words: “We didn’t all agree.”
After the verdict disagreement, the judge asked the panel to continue deliberating. Shortly after, the clerk read what the final verdict: Not guilty.
Then, the judge polled the jury. Seven for guilty, five for not guilty.
How could the verdict be not guilty, if seven people said guilty?The jury had been instructed by the judge that, under the capital murder charge, all 12 of them must agree on a guilty verdict. But the instruction did not say that the entire panel of seven blacks and five whites also must unanimously agree on a not guilty verdict. deliberated another 9 hours and could not reach a unanimous verdict.

Tellis faces another murder indictment in Louisiana, where he’s accused in the torture death of Meing-Chen Hsiao, a 34-year-old Taiwanese graduate student at the University of Louisiana at Monroe. Hsiao died the evening of July 29 after being stabbed over 30 times, according to the warrant. It is believed superficial cuts and slices were used to inflict pain until the victim provided her PIN number.